On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 05:46:57PM +0100, Catalin Marinas wrote: > On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 05:21:27PM +0100, Daniel Borkmann wrote: > > On 09/12/2014 06:03 PM, Catalin Marinas wrote: > > > On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 08:11:37AM +0100, Daniel Borkmann wrote: > > >> Will, Catalin, Dave, this is more or less a heads-up: when net-next and > > >> arm64-next tree will get both merged into Linus' tree, we will run into > > >> a 'silent' merge conflict until someone actually runs eBPF JIT on ARM64 > > >> and might notice (I presume) an oops when JIT is freeing bpf_prog. I'd > > >> assume nobody actually _runs_ linux-next, but not sure about that > > >> though. > > > > > > Some people do. > > > > > >> How do we handle this? Would I need to resend this patch when the time > > >> comes or would you ARM64 guys take care of it automagically? ;) > > > > > > I think we could disable BPF for arm64 until -rc1 and re-enable it > > > together with this patch. > > > > Ok, yes, that would mitigate it a bit. Sounds fine to me. > > > > > One comment below: > > > > > >> --- a/arch/arm64/net/bpf_jit_comp.c > > >> +++ b/arch/arm64/net/bpf_jit_comp.c > > > [...] > > >> +static void jit_fill_hole(void *area, unsigned int size) > > >> +{ > > >> + /* Insert illegal UND instructions. */ > > >> + u32 *ptr, fill_ins = 0xe7ffffff; > > > > > > On arm64 we don't have a guaranteed undefined instruction space (and > > > Will tells me that on Thumb-2 for the 32-bit arm port it actually is a > > > valid instruction, it seems that you used the same value). > > > > Hm, ok, the boards we've tried out and where Zi tested it too, it worked. > > So, if I try this: > > $ echo 0xffffffe7 | xxd -r > test.bin > $ arm-linux-gnueabihf-objdump -m arm -D -b binary test.bin > ... > 0: e7ffffff udf #65535 ; 0xffff
...and for Thumb, it ends up as: 0: ffff e7ff vqshl.u64 q15, <illegal reg q15.5>, #63 which does happen to be undefined, but it feels fragile to rely on that particular instruction form always having UNDEF behaviour. > Do you use the same constant on arm32? > > > > I think the only guaranteed way is to use the BRK #imm instruction but > > > it requires some changes to the handling code as it is currently used > > > for kgdb (unless you can use two instructions for filling in which could > > > generate a NULL pointer access). > > > > The trade-off would be that if we align on 8, it would certainly increase > > the probability to jump to the right offset. Note, on x86_64 we have no > > alignment requirements, hence 1, and on s390x only alignment of 2. > > > > So, on that few (?) boards where UND would be a valid instruction [ as > > opposed to crash the kernel ], would it translate into a NOP and just > > 'walk' from there into the JIT image? > > On current ARMv8 CPU implementations, the above constant is unallocated > in the A64 instruction space. But you never know, it may be allocated in > the future. > > I think it's easier if you just use something like BRK #0x100 (opcode > 0xd4202000) which would trigger a fault in the kernel (kgdb uses #imm > 0x400 and 0x401). > > An unallocated BRK would trigger a fault via do_debug_exception -> > brk_handler and panic the kernel. Sounds sensible. Will -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/